B—The Daily Collegian Wednesday, Dec. 15, 1982 • headliners by The Associated Press , , Hepburn remains hospitalized Actress Katharine Hepburn will remain for several days at Hartford Hospital, where she is recovering from a broken ankle suffered in a car wreck. Hepburn, 73, had surgery Monday night. Spokesman James Battaglio said "her condition is good, but we expect her to remain here for a few days." Hepburn, on her way to New York City in a rented car, was driving in the snow late Monday morning on Connecticut Route 154 in Old Saybrook and hit a utility pole, police said. Police said she didn't appear to be speeding and apparently was distracted while driving. No charges were filed. Also injured was Hepburn's secretary, Phyllis Wilbourn, who suffered a fractured left wrist. Kern Auditorium 7:30 p.m. FACTORY REBATE! A once in a lifetime opportunity on the feature-packed OLYMPUS aNIIIOF© Now with these breakthrough features: Off-the-film (OTF)'"exposure automation plus Full Exposure Control ❑ Viewfinder LED's signal shutter speed, flash charge and exposure confirmation o Audio-visual self-timer and battery condition signals ❑ In chrome or black, or FC Quartz model with digital data back Tenn State `BooK§tore 1 7 ° llCi k: . : a free one-man performative by Dr.TonyM.Lentz Ball! 'Humbug! Christmas Carol' Dec. 14 &15 f :.. W,.1 11 0 ‘. 34hit0 $3O with Olympus Lens AP Laserphoto Katharine Hepburn on campus Car repossession astounds Collins British actress Joan Collins was arriving at a charity gala at Royal Albert Hall when she was served a writ for the return of a car she was loaned 18 months ago. "To issue the writ in public was unforgivable," the star of TV's "Dynasty" said yesterday. Queen Elizabeth II attended the show and "must have been embarrassed" when she heard about the writ. The writ was obtained by a car dealer, Henlys of London, which claimed a car loaned to the actress to promote sales was never returned. But Collins said she thought the car had been returned "Now it seems that the people handling my affairs didn't give it back. I only used it once and I haven't a clue who has been keeping it since." QUALITY COPIES 50 IT'S NO GAMBLE 238• COPY (across from Penn Towers) Cadavers captivate California classroom AGOURA, Calif. (AP) Human cadavers are "the ultimate in study aids" in an Agoura High School anat omy class where human corpses are dissected along with the remains of cats and frogs. And for students like Tom Carmi chael, biology classes as a college freshman are a breeze because he was able to study the cadavers in high school. Many medical students don't get to work on cadavers until their second year of training. Tough prerequisites help ensure that only serious students enroll in his physiology and anatomy class, Jerry Lasnik said. He puts a group of juniors and seniors through about six weeks of lectures, reading and lab work before he introduces the cadaver:. Nobody is forced to work on the cadaver to pass the course, and stu dents who take the class out of mor bid curiosity "will flunk out before they get a peek," Lasnik said. But students not taking the class are just as curious. "I realized that what I was holding in my hands was the sum total of emotions, experiences, suffering that HISTORY ROUNDTABLE WINTER FILM SERIES All films in 271 Willard, 7:30 pm Dec. 15 - 3 Mid-East Documentaries Jan 5 - 2 World at War Films Jan 19 - The Making of a President-1968 Feb 2 - Olympia 1-1935 Berlin Games Feb. 16 - Victory at Sea, parts 1-3 Be choosy. Sell your goods to a captive audience through Collegian Classifieds. • Room 126 Carnegie 'lt was the ultimate in study aids.' this person had gone through," he said. "I was thinking that this four pounds of matter is essentially what this man was." "It was the ultimate in study aids," said Carmichael. Lasnik has equipped his classroom with, items donated by the commu nity. But locating a cadaver was something else. "Everyone told me, 'For a high school? Forget it!' " Lasnik said. But fin Ally he got a cadaver after contact ing John Sykes, a curator at the University of California-San Diego medical school. "As long as the class is conducted properly if the purpose is to learn the structure .of the human body then I'm all for it," Sykes said. Call ing Lasnik a "true professional," Sykes said he had no doubt about the Agoura program and agreed to sup ply cadavers, which cost about p 25 UNIVERSITY CALENDAR --- Wednesday , December 15 Holiday Festival IX, plant sale, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., Kern Lobby. Women .Artists Film Series, Frankenthaler: Toward a New Climate, 12:15 p.m., Zoller Gallery. Graduate Council meeting, 3 p.m., Room 101 Kern. Poetry Reading, Carol Muske, 3:30 p.m., Rare Books Room, Pattee. Business Admin. Undergrad. Student Council Christmas party, 5:30 pan., Room 201 Bus. Admin. Bldg. HUB Board coffeehouse, 7 p.th., HUB Main Lounge. Academic Assembly high school recruitment meeting, 7 p.m., Room 111 Boucke. Labor Studies Dept. and Club, Frontlash, and Women's Studies lecture, 7 p.m., Room 214 Boucke. Eng. Undergrad. Student Council meeting, 7 p.m., Room 316 Hammond Bldg. Bio Society meeting, 7 p.m., Room 307 Boucke Bldg. Hort Club meeting, 7 p.m., Rooni 108 Tyson. USG Academic Assembly meeting, 7:30 p.m., Room 307 HUB. Colloquy, columnist Jack Anderson, 8 p.m., Eisenhower Aud. Campus Bible Fellowship meeting, 9 p.m., Room 108 Chambers ARHS meeting, 10.p.m., Rooms 320-321 HUB. —Tom Carmichael The first time he uses the cadaver, Lasnik generally wheels it our unex pectedly in the middle of a lab. "OK, gang, take a few minutes off. We're going to bring out the cadav er," Lasnik told students recently when the time came for a presenta-. tion. There was silence as they gathered about the black plastic body bag wheeled into the classroom. While Lasnik unzipped the body bag and exposed the corpse, he told the students a little about it including age and cause of death. Expressions on the students' faces ranged from blank stares to distaste. Lasnik fielded a few questions before wheeling the body out of the class room. Then the students slowly returned to work on the cats they had been dissecting. e . ac..s,,..are The Daily Collegian other publication comes close. radio. Not television. Not direct 95 0 / „ of the students read The Daily Collegian. (Have read or looked into during the "past seven days.") 89 % 12% of the students depend most on The Daily Collegian 850 0 Those are the facts. * Nobody reaches Penn State like The Daily Collegian, because nobody covers Penn State like The Daily Collegian. editors. Our reporters and coverage than any other organization. For state, national and world news coverage, our News Staff uses the high speed newswires of The Associated Press. Stories are beamed from the Westar 111 satellite to our computer systems 24 hours a day. No other area news organization has a better resource. More than 200 students the daily * Source: 1982 College Newspaper Study, Belden Associates, Dallas, Tex. of the students who read a newspaper "yesterday" read The Daily Collegian of the students rely most on The Daily Collegian for shopping information. is still No. 1 serve on our News photographers turn at Penn State's main campus. No other medium comes close. Not mail. Staff, which out more campus news The Daily Collegian Wednesday, Dec. 15, includes 40